:
See also for a longer list ;Nobel laureates •
Eric Cornell (PhD 1990), Bose–Einstein condensate •
Richard Feynman (SB 1939), quantum electrodynamics •
Murray Gell-Mann (PhD 1951), quarks •
Henry Kendall (PhD 1955), deep inelastic scattering •
Robert Laughlin (PhD 1979), fractional quantum Hall effect •
William D. Phillips (PhD 1976), laser cooling •
Burton Richter (SB 1952, PhD 1956), J/psi particle •
Adam Riess (SB 1992), high-Z supernova search team •
John Robert Schrieffer (SB 1953), BCS theory •
William Shockley (PhD 1936), transistor •
George Smoot (SB 1966, PhD 1970), cosmic microwave background radiation •
Carl E. Wieman (SB 1973), Bose–Einstein condensate •
Rainer Weiss (SB 1965, PhD 1962), LIGO •
Andrea Ghez (SB 1982), supermassive black hole in galaxy ;Other major physics discoveries •
Gerald Guralnik (SB 1958),
Higgs mechanism and
Higgs boson •
Carl Richard Hagen (SB & SM 1958, PhD 1962),
Higgs mechanism and
Higgs boson ;Breakthrough Prizes in Fundamental Physics •
Alan Guth (SB & SM 1969, PhD 1972), theory of
inflation •
Cumrun Vafa (SB 1981), string theory •
Andrew Strominger (PhD 1982), string theory •
Charles L. Bennett (PhD 1984),
WMAP •
Charles Kane (PhD 1989),
topological insulators •
Eugene Mele (PhD 1978), topological insulators ;In government •
Solomon J. Buchsbaum (PhD 1957), chair of
White House Science Council under Bush and Reagan •
Shirley Ann Jackson (SB 1968, PhD 1973), chair of US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, president of RPI, second black woman to earn a physics PhD in the U.S. •
Lucas Papademos (SB 1970), prime minister of Greece ;Astronauts •
Ronald McNair (PhD 1976), Challenger astronaut •
Jerome J. Apt (PhD 1976) •
John M. Grunsfeld (SB 1980) •
Timothy Creamer (SM 1992) •
Neil Woodward (SB 1984) ==See also==